Monday, November 23, 2009
"Demolition by Decay: The Tale of the Edgewater Sign" — From First- to Third-person
Postcard image of the Queen and Roncesvalles corner, taken in the 70s.
At Queen and Roncesvalles, there's a hole in the sky, nothing where there should be something—the Edgewater Hotel sign. A battered but characterful old vintage 50s neon beauty that became a beloved fixture in Parkdale's visual landscape, the sign whispered of boozy nights at the lobby bar and legions of travelling salesmen schlepping their sample cases over from the Sunnyside bus terminal next door. Only a few short months ago, writer Rick McGinnis traced the history of the corner, its buildings (now a McDonald's and a Howard Johnson's), and their wonderful signs in a BlogTO article.
The news of the sign's fate is not good. At the Parkdale Residents' Association meeting last Thursday, Ward 14 city councillor Gord Perks (councillor_perks@toronto.ca) told the sorry tale of "the previous administration" doing a deal with the owners of the building in which they were allowed to keep a ginormous third-party billboard above the hotel (which, according to Rami Tabello of IllegalSigns.ca, also contravenes bylaws) on the condition that the Edgewater sign, supposedly under heritage protection, be kept.
Despite repeated warnings from the city about the situation and likely consequences, the owners allowed the sign to rust away until it became a safety issue, and the city was forced to order it down. According to Perks, "there was no legal requirement" that the owners maintain the Hotel's sign—"only that they keep it or lose the third-party sign." When asked if and how that would happen, Perks' response was that the enforcement process was in the works, but that it was likely to be lengthy and the owners would probably appeal, yadda yadda yadda.
In a 2006 article, Toronto Star architecture critic Christopher Hume described the practice of "demolition by decay," by which heritage building owners sidestep their responsibilities by simply letting the properties rot until they fail safety inspections and have to come down. Potentially costly problems solved!
It all comes down to what we value, and whether we—and the city whose job it is to protect our built heritage—have the foresight to do what's necessary to preserve it before it's too late. NOW Magazine and Torontoist both covered the story, and here's hoping the coverage shames the owners of 14 Roncesvalles into regretting some of their choices, or at least into thinking twice about future ones.
Meanwhile, all leads on what actually happened to the sign are cold. Maybe if it's still out there somewhere, it will someday grace the 'hood once again. A long shot, but it's that "Imagine"-slash-Miracle on 34th Street time of year, isn't it?
Sunday, November 8, 2009
Your Blogs
Live and Learn (Jane K's)
Not a Cycling Blog (Shanny's)
Branding Worth Spreading (Danie's)
Resume Righting (Matt's)
What's Up With That? (Kathleen's)
Ms. Behaviour (Jane's)
Blossington Toronto (Dina's)
Last updated on November 12 at 6:16 p.m.
Monday, November 2, 2009
1144 days from today..
H1N1 Panic, Confusion Reigns
This past week saw parents scrambling to make last minute changes to their children's Halloween costumes while madly trying to find a way to get the trick-or-treaters vaccinated against the H1N1 virus. The costumes were the easy part. The vaccination...not so much. Anxious parents drove across the city and lined up for hours, only to be told by Public Health workers that lines had been closed, or clinics had not even opened. In Toronto there’s a new standard by which to judge the “Haves” and “Have-Nots” and it all involves who’s managed to roll up their sleeves and get the elusive needle.
How quickly public sentiment can change. Just one week ago, an email arrived in my inbox from a friend imploring everyone on his contact list to NOT be vaccinated. Why? Because a neurosurgeon in Louisiana advocates against all vaccines on the basis of toxicity. As of Friday, that same friend was calling Medcan, a private medical clinic, desperately looking for a way to get his son vaccinated at the front of the line. He wasn’t alone. Across the city, people woke up, read the alarming headlines that two children had died of flu-like symptoms and stampeded doctors offices, local ER departments and the late-to-the-game flu clinics. Clearly, large swaths of the population agreed with the Globe and Mail’s public health reporter, Andre Picard, when he wrote “The risk (of the vaccine) ... is theoretical. The risk of the flu is real”.
Municipalities across North America are struggling to deliver vaccinations efficiently - a major embarrassment after imploring citizens to be vaccinated and stop the spread of this latest virulent flu. Creative approaches are being used; Los Angeles County, California provided drive-through clinics and managed to serve over 3,000 people about four hours, not withstanding horrific traffic jams. Sault Sainte-Marie got it right and is being hailed as a model of pandemic preparedness. The Soo’s 80,000 residents didn’t have to brave lengthy lineups in the rain and/or vaccine shortages because the community’s public health authority has long understood the importance of technology in administering health care. By simply working with a (private) phone centre, priority-designated Soo residents could call a 1-800 number, book an appointment, show up at the designated time and place and be inoculated. How incredibly civilized.
This weekend, Canadians were grimly informed that health authorities are expecting a massive delay in receiving the millions of vaccines ordered from the manufacturer GlaxoSmithKlein. Oops. Clinics will only be vaccinating priority individuals and not implementing the roll-out for the general population. Poor planning combined with hysteria has lead to front-line health care workers being inundated with questions, requests and threats. Dr. Marvin Gans, a respected North Toronto pediatrician and physician at Sick Kid’s hospital surveyed the wreckage of his waiting room last Thursday and off-handedly announced to those of us lined up that Public Health had royally f**cked this flu vaccine up. He had no way of knowing if they could even deliver half of the required vaccines to his office as promised. Oops again. But really, what should Torontonians have expected? Let’s not forget that Toronto Public Health spent the majority of the summer on strike instead of preparing for the next great flu disaster. Granted, it’s no simple feat to inoculate millions of people against a flu strain that reared it’s nasty head a mere seven months ago, but Canadians are (for the most part) practical and well educated. We won’t ignore the sad fact of dying children and will do whatever it takes to get inoculated.
So tomorrow, I will disregard any lingering doubts about vaccine safety and toxicity and take my children to Dr. Gans’ office for their vaccines. Oh yes, I was one of the lucky few who got an appointment, but will have to brave the waiting room packed with equally concerned parents all hoping for the same thing: that the doctor doesn’t run-out of the vaccine before seeing my kids. But luckily, Halloween has come and gone, and I’ll have a big bag of candy to keep them quiet as we wait. But really, who knows? I may walk out of there with two children wildly jacked on sugar, but sadly not jabbed by a needle. I’ll keep you posted.
Sunday, November 1, 2009
Technology + Politics + Celebrity + Film + Music + Pop Culture = ?
But how to stitch them together? I closed my eyes and concentrated on each topic in turn, waiting to see what images might come. In a flash straight out of A Beautiful Mind, I quickly saw it could only B. Obama.
Technology
As the first e-commander in chief, Obama freely admits to an intractable addiction to his Blackberry, facing down the security Gestapo who threatened to confiscate it shortly after he was elected. Happily, after some high-tech tweaking and de-Friending a bunch of people on Facebook, his favourite sidearm was safely restored to its holster.
Additional proof of the Prez's tech-savviness is the November, 2008 debut of his weekly Web address, a kind of YouTube fireside chat that manages to straddle the formal–informal line while avoiding his predecessors' annoying habit of interrupting my primetime TV shows.
Politics
Check.
Celebrity
Can anyone really argue against Obama as a celebrity? Not since the saxophone player have we had someone so telegenic. Hasn't he been on Oprah? And Letterman? (Yes, yes, he's also been on Leno and Kimmel, but we all know they don't count.) And do I even need to remind you of Obamania and Obama Girl?
Film
Rumour has it Denzel has been signed to play him in the movie. 'Nuff said.
Music
Obama's impact on the U.S. music industry is undeniable (not counting the aforementioned Obama Girl's "Crush on Obama"). Dozens of musicians leapt aboard the Yes We Can campaign wagon, then jostled for a spot in the winner's limelight. The musical message from the newly funky White House was also received loud and clear: at the Feb. 18 "We Are One" concert, performers including BeyoncĂ©, Bono, Bruce Springsteen, John Mellencamp, Usher, Shakira, Sheryl Crow, Josh Groban, Pete Seeger, James Taylor, Stevie Wonder, Renee Fleming, Garth Brooks, Mary J. Blige, and Herbie Hancock did their best to aurally represent the theme. (However, as Jon Stewart pointed out at the time (see 3:10–3:30), a democratic line-up doesn't necessarily translate into pleasing all of the people all of the time.)
And who among us who isn't an active member of a militia didn't get misty when Beyoncé serenaded Barack and Michelle with "At Last" at the Inaugural Ball?
Pop Culture
Lastly, we come to my favourite category. For just a taste of Pop! Goes the Obama, let's troll the e-waters for the history of black presidents in TV and movies, and discussions of whether or not the fictional versions helped the real guy win. In Slate, Troy Patterson looks back at black Hollywood commanders-in-chief, and over at NPR, Scott Simon interviews Weekend Edition's entertainment critic, Elvis Mitchell, who points out that in most movies, "you could only have a black president...when the Earth was about to be destroyed. He would never get to complete his term."
In his thoughtful entry in the Hollywood-casts-the-presidency discussion, Sean Higgins takes a more detailed look at the Pre-Obamas. Higgins applies Shelby Steele's theory of black leaders as "challengers" vs. "bargainers" and finds that like his fictional predecessors David Palmer (Dennis Haysbert in 24) and Tom Beck (Morgan Freeman in Deep Impact), Obama seems to falls squarely in the fatherly "bargainer" category.
Ha! Looks like I've found him—the El Dorado of blogging.
Now...where do I send my invoice?